Commentary
14 November, 2011

Can APEC Deal Help COP17 Climate Change Talks?

The Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) countries may become a good example of how to deal politically with deadlocking issues. At their summit in Honolulu last week,they agreed to reduce import tariffs to boost trade in products that cut fossil fuel use and reduce pollution. 

With dismal expectations for the COP17 climate change talks, which will open in Durban, South Africa later this month, this agreement looks like a lesson on how to bridge differences and reach consensus. It could also somehow inspire the parties to the climate convention about to gather in South Africa. Durban’s COP17 risks provoking the collapse of the UN climate change negotiations architecture if it ends on a standstill.

The APEC meeting started with sharp differences between the U.S. and China. Opening statements from both countries’ leaders, Barack Obama and Hu Jintao, explicitly mentioned their disagreements. Obama even showed a trace of irritation with Chinese trade practices. “We’re going to continue to be firm that China operate by the same rules as everyone else,” he said at the close of the 21-nation APEC summit, after saying that “enough is enough”.  It looked like a deadlock would be unavoidable.

In his opening statement, Hu Jintao insisted on more clout for China as an emerging global power. He also made clear Beijing prefers to work through existing global trade architecture rather than allow itself to be subject to U.S.-led efforts to open Asia-Pacific markets at any cost. Chinese officials also warned that the U.S. decision to launch a probe that could lead to anti-dumping duties on Chinese-made solar cells and modules could impair energy cooperation within APEC.

But, at the end of the meeting, both countries managed to agree to cut import tariffs on environmental goods (mainly clean energy products) to 5 percent by 2015. APEC members also pledged to eliminate domestic content requirements that distort environmental goods and services trade by the end of 2012.

Additionally the APEC leaders agreed to:

* rationalize and phase out inefficient fossil-fuel subsidies that encourage wasteful consumption, and set up a voluntary reporting mechanism on progress, to be reviewed annually;

* promote energy efficiency by taking specific steps related to transport, buildings, power grids, jobs, knowledge sharing, and education in support of energy-smart low-carbon communities; incorporate low-emissions development strategies into our economic growth plans and leverage APEC to push forward this agenda;

* a goal of reducing the region’s energy intensity by 45 percent by 2035;

* work to implement appropriate measures to prohibit trade in illegally harvested forest products and undertake additional activities in APEC to combat illegal logging and associated trade.

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